- Jul 24, 2004
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Which option would be better, for drives running 24/7 ? Which one would last longer, have smaller probability of failing ?
Say external drive is in an AMS DS3 enclosure.
Say external drive is in an AMS DS3 enclosure.
Originally posted by: Bobthelost
I'd go for a 3.5" factor drive with an actively cooled external enclosure, it'll be noisier than any other option, but it's the one i'd put the reliance upon.
Originally posted by: corkyg
Originally posted by: Bobthelost
I'd go for a 3.5" factor drive with an actively cooled external enclosure, it'll be noisier than any other option, but it's the one i'd put the reliance upon.
There again, we are avoiding answering the question. By having two different types of drives, we are comparing apples and oranges. The question is, assuming the same exact drives, which is the friendlier environment - internal or external in a laptop. That means the question only addresses 2.5-in drives.
Originally posted by: corkyg
You are right! Therefore, the question is somewhat ambiguous and requires an ambiguous answer.
In general, all 3.5-in HDDs are more reliable than 2.5-in ones regradless of where you put them.
Peace!![]()
Originally posted by: corkyg
Notebooks should not be run 24/7. Their cooling systems are really not designed for that.
Originally posted by: GeekDrewI'm not sure if this is still the case, but Seagate used to offer a 2 year warranty on external 2.5" drives, but 5 years on internal 2.5" drives... and the drive was the exact same model; the only difference was that the external one came inside of an external housing. I assume (be that correctly or no) that they're betting that internal drives will last longer.
Originally posted by: corkyg
Originally posted by: GeekDrewI'm not sure if this is still the case, but Seagate used to offer a 2 year warranty on external 2.5" drives, but 5 years on internal 2.5" drives... and the drive was the exact same model; the only difference was that the external one came inside of an external housing. I assume (be that correctly or no) that they're betting that internal drives will last longer.
Good point GeekDrew. But - how does Seagate know where the drive was when it failed? Example - I have several Seagate 2.5" drives in external housings - but they all came as a result of upgrades to the laptop's internal drive. IOW, all were at one time Internal and then gotshifted by me as they were replaced by bigger drives internally.
If one fails, and I request a replacement under the 5-year warranty, and I provide the laptop's model, etc., how can a distinction be made?
But, I do agree with your logic that Seagate must have a reason for a shorter warranty on externals.
